[bksvol-discuss] Re: Things spellcheck can't do

  • From: "siss52" <siss52@xxxxxxx>
  • To: <bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 8 Feb 2006 00:24:22 -0600

<<<<<lol>>>>  Oh, that is funny!!!!!  Priceless!!!

Sue S.

----- Original Message -----
From: Carrie Karnos
To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Tuesday, February 07, 2006 9:01 PM
Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: Things spellcheck can't do


I was validating a book that had Part I, Part II, etc in it, but
unfortunately the OCR program read the capital P's as capital F's.....  I
made double-sure I changed them all back to P's!

Carrie

Estelnalissi <airadil@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
  Dear Mickey,

  Mickey, you gave me such a great laugh. I know just what you mean! I've
  found absurd scannos in the best of scans which to my mind are nobody's
  fault. The mousetraps may be better, but none of them are fool proof. As
  long as scannoes exist, I prefer to find them endearing and love ridding
the
  book of the little pests so they won't distract a reader who will download
a
  book I've validated from Bookshare. Here are a few samples from a wide
  selection of books.

  My favorite
  All of the orcs in the Tolkien books were ores.
  farmers were fanners
  ll became U
  al became d
  M was AA
  e was 9
  saints were sahts
  battles are barrles
  flying was frying
  and fry was try
  accented letters were anyone's guess
  anything in italics was fair game

  Mind you I'm talking about a teeny few errors in masses of text, but being
a
  perfectionist has its rewards and not primarily in the form of credits.
The
  humor factor ranks high with me along with the satisfaction factor.

  I hope to read about more of the funny surprises our scans turn up.

  Always with love,

  Lissi

  ----- Original Message -----
  From: "mickey"
  To:
  Sent: Tuesday, February 07, 2006 6:12 PM
  Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Things spellcheck can't do


  > Hi, List.
  >
  > Now, I'll admit I'm nothing if not totally anal. I'm a proofreader by
  > profession, and read everything in sight. I normally read any b ook I
  > validate, but the book I'm reading now really points up the value of
  > reading books before circulating.
  >
  > The book is On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. The book
ended
  > up as 840 pages long, and I'd assume by the size it was a big one.
  > Definitely had to build muscles to scan that puppy!
  >
  > I learned things like the well-known author Erie Stanley Gardner wrote
the
  > Perry Mason material. Then there was the comedy team, George Burns and
  > Grade Allen. The spell-checker choked on all the names. And the poor
  > scanner thought 1945-49 or anything of that type should be written
1945^9.
  >
  > I believe that it is close to 50 sides on cassette from NLS. Now I'm
  > working on the Index, should be done tomorrow.
  >
  > Are there really people who think we do this just for the credit? I
  > figured I'd be the perfect person to do this, because I'm old enough to
< BR>> remember many of the names. But just a spellcheck would never work.
  >
  > Kudos to the person who had the patience to scan this book. Now I'll go
  > take it off my wishlist from NLS.
  >
  > Thanks.
  >
  > Mickey
  > To unsubscribe from this list send a blank Email to
  > bksvol-discuss-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
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line.
  >
  >


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